Venezuela Outlaws GMOs, Moves Toward Organic Agriculture

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While it could be reversed by the new majority government, Venezuela is the latest country to ban cultivation of GMO crops, passing the Seed Law at the end of 2015.

Not only does the law forbid GMO seed imports and cultivation, it ensures national sovereignty over indigenous seeds by prohibiting patents, and the transition to sustainable agriculture. A central body called the National Seed System will enforce the law, focusing on protecting traditional seeds and rooting out agricultural violations.

Called one of the most progressive seed laws in the world, it commits the country to agroecology and is a product of direct participatory democracy – hammered out between lawmakers and a broad-based grassroots coalition.

Among the goals are:

Transition from conventional monoculture and chemical-based agriculture to an "agroecological system" that protects biodiversity and the environment.

National sovereignty over food production: producing enough indigenous seeds to meet national needs to avoid having to import food.

In December, Taiwan banned GMOs in food served in schools, taking GMO soybeans, tofu, soy milk and corn off the menu – which comprise a large part of the diet. The country rejected GMO salmon as soon as the US approved it and requires all foods with GMOs to be labeled.

Monsanto on Buying Spree

As Monsanto and its peers are increasingly locked out of countries through laws like these, they still see a way to profit – by buying up companies that produce heirloom seeds. They are also buying patents for these traditionally used seeds, so "no matter where you buy certain seeds, they get money from it," says Maddy Harland in Permaculture Magazine.

Monsanto’s goal is to control the world’s seeds – one way or the other.

"We need legislation and efforts designed to protect family-based agriculture, not factory and corporate farming," he says. Hillary Clinton, on the other hand, supports GMO agriculture, calling out Americans for not understanding its value.